There are many books out there on CSS, but Beginning CSS Web Development is differentit doesnt waste time discussing theory, and it delves straight into the practical matter. It provides you with what you need to know, faster.

Beginning JSON is the definitive guide to JSON - JavaScript Object Notation - today’s standard in data formatting for the web. The book starts with the basics, and walks you through all aspects of using the JSON format. Beginning JSON covers all areas of JSON from the basics of data formats to creating your own server to store and retrieve persistent data.

Cloud Standards is a discussion of important existing and future standards. For existing standards, the emphasis is on how they are used and practical advice to engineers constructing clouds and cloud-based services. For future standards, the book focuses on why a standard is needed, what the benefits will be, and what is being done now to fill the gap.

You'll already know why you should be using CSS, so we don't bore you with pages of theory; instead, this book jumps straight into practical solutions, allowing you to get what you need as quickly as possible.

The Internet abounds with information on CSS-based design. However, it's spread across a large and disparate group of sites and can be very difficult to find. The purpose of this book is to pull all this information together in one place, thus creating a definitive guide to modern CSS based techniques.

The CSS Quick Syntax Reference is a 150-page syntax reference to the Cascading Style Sheet specification and style sheet language. It presents the essentials of CSS in a well-organized format that can be used as a handy reference.

CSS3 contains a broad set of new additions and changes to the core CSS language across a range of modules, which means lots of new things to learn, and lots of new things that can go wrong. This book provides solutions to all of the most common CSS3 problems.

Foundation HTML5 Canvas gives you the tools you need to create fantastic games, animations, and interactive user interfaces natively within the browser using the canvas tag, functionality that previously was only possible using plug-ins such as Flash.